Future Spaces of Power

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anti-democratic futures
artificial intelligence
Category=GTC
Category=JBC
Category=JBFZ
colonization
cyberspace
environmental degradation
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
imperialism
labor
late capitalism
metaverse
narratives
neoliberalism
postmodernism
science fiction
science myths
sex technology
simulation
space exploration
space management
temporality
virtual space

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666957587
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Future Spaces of Power explores political, cultural, and societal narratives of future space(s) on a global scale to complicate the cultural logic of systemic futures that exist outside the boundaries of dominant political imaginaries.

Contributors critically engage with alternative visions found in literature, film, and other cultural artifacts that encourage us to either live with or escape from the systemic conditions of neoliberalism and late capitalism and consider what these alternative visions might do – or fail to do – in combating anti-democratic futures, environmental degradation, and new forms of imperialism. Through these analyses, the volume collectively argues that anti-postmodern and postmodern readings of future spaces overlook the everyday lived experiences of certain bodies – including chronic health problems, effects from systemic racism, and other experiences of insecurity, fear, and death in the face of institutionalized violence – by disregarding differential experiences of time within different spatial contexts.

Contributors suggest that critiques of narratives occurring within and about virtual and metaspaces, artificial intelligence, space exploration, and even the colonization of outer space can provide critical insights concerning global futures and our perceptions of space and time, especially as they inform how we should live in the present amid environmental destruction, information capitalism, neoliberalism, and the remaining infrastructures of colonialism. Ultimately, this book interrogates how a variety of media shape and inform our understanding and assumptions about conceptualizations of future space(s) as it demonstrates how governmentality eliminates and regulates surplus bodies – both overtly and covertly – through the technological, spatial, discursive, and temporal management of space.

Caroline Alphin is Instructor of English at Radford University and Instructor of Political Science at Virginia Tech, USA.

E. Leigh McKagen is Instructor in the Department of History at Virginia Tech, USA.

Shelby E. Ward is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Tusculum University, USA.